And most importantly, Zig is aiming at being a C++ replacement with the simplicity of C, it is not trying to replace C.
Any C++ or C replacement will need to win the earths of mainstream OS and game console vendors, otherwise it will remain yet another wannabe candidate.
Those have already their own languages, alongside their own C and C++ compilers, and are only now starting to warm up to Rust.
Zig or any other candidate will have a very hard time being considered.
I disagree Zig is that great deal of a language, it would have been if we were talking about 1990's programming language ecosystem, not in 21st century.
Use-after-free problems should not be something we still need to worry about, when tooling like PurifyPlus trace back to 1992.
Use-after-free is a fact of life until something kills C, but the realities of language adoption are against that. Zig seems interesting and worthwhile in offering a different perspective on the problem and does it in a way more agreeable than Rust or the like for all those who love C and are adverse to large complex languages. The realities of language adoption are as much for as against Zig, large numbers of people are still getting drawn to C and Zig seems to do a better job addressing why so many are drawn to it than the alternatives.
Otherwise the only users are going to be the ones happy to do some yak shaving instead of the actual application code with the vendor tools.
It also ignores that C doesn't stand still, the competition is C2y, not C89.
Your comment about gamedev focus makes no sense as that it the most hardcore segment of all the programming there is. So if a language is good for gamedev, it's good for everything else - with high performance.
I'm still in the GC camp with Go and don't see myself leaving any time soon but Zig is just rust-fugly and takes for ever to complete(it started 10 years ago, mind you). Odin is essentially complete, just lacks official spec. I like it but can' bring myself to use it as it lacks methods and I won' be going back to writing a procedural code like its 2002.
I'm curious to see Jai being released, despite having no use case for it. My initial post is merely about purposefulness, or the lack of, for named programming languages as nowadays John's name will carry more weight than Zig could ever have. so without Zig being 1.0 after a decade, and having no competitive advantage over Jai, it has no chance to survive after Jai is released. As I said, Odin will likely will as it is quite simpler, more niche language. Zig just goes directly against Jai and it will lose.
You really should learn a few new languages if you think that’s remotely true. For example, Lisp macros are the distant ancestors of most metaprogramming techniques, dating from the 60s. But there are many similar techniques that precede Zig comptime and Jai, like D’s mixins and templates, which together have very similar power to comptime. There are also Nim macros which I believe also precede Jai. Even the C preprocessor could probably be considered an inspiration for anyone creating a C competitor before we need to invoke Jai ideas.
You’ve made this claim on here before and when I asked you to substantiate it with a source you were completely unable to.
That's your opinion or you have a source for that?
Not really. Rust was a thing long before Jai.
I'm sorry but Zig has been used to create actual production software for many companies whereas Jai has been used maybe once for a mediocre game.